John Fields

On July 20, 2006, JOHN FIELDS JR.; loving son of Deacon John Fields Sr.; dear brother of Helen Fields Moore; he is also survived by a host of other relatives and friends. Friends may call at the Family Owned MARCH FUNERAL HOME WEST, INC., 4300 Wabash Avenue, on Friday, after 9 A.M. The family will receive friends on Saturday in New Psalmist Baptist Church, 4501M-l Old Frederick Road, at 9:30 A.M., followed by funeral service at 10.

On July 20, 2006, JOHN FIELDS JR.; loving son of Deacon John Fields Sr.; dear brother of Helen Fields Moore; he is also survived by a host of other relatives and friends. Friends may call at the Family Owned MARCH FUNERAL HOME WEST, INC., 4300 Wabash Avenue, on Friday, after 9 A.M. The family will receive friends on Saturday in New Psalmist Baptist Church, 4501M-l Old Frederick Road, at 9:30 A.M., followed by funeral service at 10.

Two athletes each from Gilman and Randallstown and a McDonogh School graduate turned in top performances in their sports last week.Although No. 7 Randallstown was dethroned by No. 4 Owings Mills, two of the Rams' three individual champions were Javin Rudolph (140 pounds) and Kent Morrison (160) in last weekend's Baltimore County wrestling tournament.In his 6-1 title bout victory, Rudolph, who dropped from 145, beat Towson's top-seeded regional champ, Shawn Kopalchick. Rudolph, who was seeded seventh, avenged an overtime loss with a win over Perry Hall's Brian Yoakum after handing No. 2 seed John Fields (Overlea)

John Fields may be the nicest guy you never want to meet on a wrestling mat.The Overlea senior is 14-0, with seven pins at 152 pounds, where he is ranked No. 4 by the Maryland State Wrestling Association.Standing just 5 feet 8 1/2 , and with sinewy arms that bench-press 270 pounds, Fields has beaten several quality opponents.Perry Hall's Austin Kim (10-3, five pins) was undefeated before becoming Fields' technical-fall victim in the John Carroll Tournament semifinals. Fields then edged Aberdeen's fifth-ranked Kit Doran, 6-2, for the tournament crown.

John Fields may be the nicest guy you never want to meet on a wrestling mat.The Overlea senior is 14-0, with seven pins at 152 pounds, where he is ranked No. 4 by the Maryland State Wrestling Association.Standing just 5 feet 8 1/2 , and with sinewy arms that bench-press 270 pounds, Fields has beaten several quality opponents.Perry Hall's Austin Kim (10-3, five pins) was undefeated before becoming Fields' technical-fall victim in the John Carroll Tournament semifinals. Fields then edged Aberdeen's fifth-ranked Kit Doran, 6-2, for the tournament crown.

Children are dying in the streets, but that is not new. Youngpeople have fallen victim to horse tramplings, railway accidents, auto crashes, floodings, fires and pollution since the dawn of the industrial revolution. It is the wide availability of handguns and the advent of hard drugs that have boosted the tempo to a ragged beat.According to a special report in the May-June Public Health Reports, journal of the U.S. Public Health Service, firearms take more than 30,000 lives each year in America, more than 20,000 in acts of ''interpersonal violence.

On December 3, 2003, REV. AGNES NORRINE FIELDS; beloved wife of John T. Fields, Sr.; beloved mother of Helen Fields-Moore and John T. Fields, Jr. Also surviving are two grandchildren, three sisters, three brothers, the New Psalmist Baptist Church Family and a host of relatives and friends. Friends may call at the family owned MARCH FUNERAL HOME WEST, INC., 4300 Wabash Avenue, on Tuesday after 8:30 A.M., where the family will greet friends from 5 to 7 P.M. Family will receive friends on Wednesday, December 10 at New Psalmist Baptist Church, 4501M-l Old Frederick Road at 10 A.M., followed by funeral service at 11 A.M. See www.marchfh.

By Lem Satterfield and John Stewart and Lem Satterfield and John Stewart,Sun Staff Writers | February 11, 1994

Weather permitting, wrestling tournaments in Baltimore and Harford counties, as well as Baltimore City's District 9 affair, will be held in the next couple days.And when they do, No. 6 Aberdeen again will be the favorite in Harford County, with No. 13 Mervo the top dog in the city, and No. 8 Perry Hall, No. 9 Eastern Tech and No. 12 Owings Mills expected to do battle in Baltimore County.Baltimore CountyThe seedings are spread rather evenly in Baltimore County, with Perry Hall, ranked No. 10 by the Maryland State Wrestling Association, having the most wrestlers (six)

The 167-year-old building at 6 Oella Ave. at the edge of historic Ellicott City has been a boarding house, seed company and a biker bar with Saturday night brawls so common that the locals nicknamed the place the "Bloody Bucket." Today, the Fields family wants the Trolley Stop restaurant to be known as a place of good food and cheap prices. In the year and a half since father Bob Fields, son John Fields and daughter Mary Fields purchased the Trolley Stop, they have continued the work begun by previous owner Joe Morea to turn it into a family restaurant.

Two athletes each from Gilman and Randallstown and a McDonogh School graduate turned in top performances in their sports last week.Although No. 7 Randallstown was dethroned by No. 4 Owings Mills, two of the Rams' three individual champions were Javin Rudolph (140 pounds) and Kent Morrison (160) in last weekend's Baltimore County wrestling tournament.In his 6-1 title bout victory, Rudolph, who dropped from 145, beat Towson's top-seeded regional champ, Shawn Kopalchick. Rudolph, who was seeded seventh, avenged an overtime loss with a win over Perry Hall's Brian Yoakum after handing No. 2 seed John Fields (Overlea)

Children are dying in the streets, but that is not new. Youngpeople have fallen victim to horse tramplings, railway accidents, auto crashes, floodings, fires and pollution since the dawn of the industrial revolution. It is the wide availability of handguns and the advent of hard drugs that have boosted the tempo to a ragged beat.According to a special report in the May-June Public Health Reports, journal of the U.S. Public Health Service, firearms take more than 30,000 lives each year in America, more than 20,000 in acts of ''interpersonal violence.